期刊论文详细信息
PeerJ
Do patients with chronic unilateral orofacial pain due to a temporomandibular disorder show increased attending to somatosensory input at the painful side of the jaw?
article
Stefaan Van Damme1  Charlotte Vanden Bulcke1  Linda Van Den Berghe2  Louise Poppe1  Geert Crombez1 
[1]Department of Experimental-Clinical and Health Psychology, Ghent University
[2]Department of Dentistry, Ghent University Hospital
[3]Department of Movement and Sport Sciences, Ghent University
[4]Center for Pain Research, University of Bath
关键词: Chronic pain;    Orofacial pain;    TMD;    Somatosensory processing;    Hypervigilance;    Attentional bias;    Spatial attention;    Temporal order judgement;   
DOI  :  10.7717/peerj.4310
学科分类:社会科学、人文和艺术(综合)
来源: Inra
PDF
【 摘 要 】
BackgroundPatients with chronic orofacial pain due to temporomandibular disorders (TMD) display alterations in somatosensory processing at the jaw, such as amplified perception of tactile stimuli, but the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. This study investigated one possible explanation, namely hypervigilance, and tested if TMD patients with unilateral pain showed increased attending to somatosensory input at the painful side of the jaw.MethodsTMD patients with chronic unilateral orofacial pain (n = 20) and matched healthy volunteers (n = 20) performed a temporal order judgment (TOJ) task indicated which one of two tactile stimuli, presented on each side of the jaw, they had perceived first. TOJ methodology allows examining spatial bias in somatosensory processing speed. Furthermore, after each block of trials, the participants rated the perceived intensity of tactile stimuli separately for both sides of the jaw. Finally, questionnaires assessing pain catastrophizing, fear-avoidance beliefs, and pain vigilance, were completed.ResultsTMD patients tended to perceive tactile stimuli at the painful jaw side as occurring earlier in time than stimuli at the non-painful side but this effect did not reach conventional levels of significance (p = .07). In the control group, tactile stimuli were perceived as occurring simultaneously. Secondary analyses indicated that the magnitude of spatial bias in the TMD group is positively associated with the extent of fear-avoidance beliefs. Overall, intensity ratings of tactile stimuli were significantly higher in the TMD group than in the control group, but there was no significant difference between the painful and non-painful jaw side in the TMD patients.DiscussionThe hypothesis that TMD patients with chronic unilateral orofacial pain preferentially attend to somatosensory information at the painful side of the jaw was not statistically supported, although lack of power could not be ruled out as a reason for this. The findings are discussed within recent theories of pain-related attention.
【 授权许可】

CC BY   

【 预 览 】
附件列表
Files Size Format View
RO202307100013042ZK.pdf 204KB PDF download
  文献评价指标  
  下载次数:0次 浏览次数:1次